Non-surgical osteoarthritis therapy, intra-articular drug delivery towards clinical applications.
Yu-Jie LiangXiao XuLimei XuIndira PrasadamLi DuanYin XiaoJiang XiaPublished in: Journal of drug targeting (2021)
Osteoarthritis (OA)is a common orthopaedic disease in middle-aged and aged people. To date, no disease-modifying drug is available to prevent the progression of OA. Surgical treatment of OA has complications such as pain and high costs with increased risk of post-operative infections. An intra-articular drug delivery is a conservative treatment method to apply therapeutic composites directly into the OA joint cavity. This method has an advantage to improve the bioavailability of therapeutics and hence is a widely preferred choice to test novel disease-modifying drug targets for OA. Herein, we summarised and discussed the current status of intra-articular therapy for OA treatment as well as outlined drug delivery of small molecular, protein and gene delivery for OA therapy. Currently, new targeted nano-based drug delivery systems, including nanoparticles, exosomes and hydrogel formulations under investigation for OA treatment via intra-articular injection are also addressed. The emerging trend demonstrates that intra-articular drug delivery has vast prospects for the clinical selective treatment of OA. The rational application of intra-articular injection of drugs and biological agents will be of great significance for alleviating the patients with OA, improving their quality of life, delaying surgery, and reducing the disease burden of OA.
Keyphrases
- drug delivery
- knee osteoarthritis
- cancer therapy
- rheumatoid arthritis
- emergency department
- current status
- mesenchymal stem cells
- minimally invasive
- risk factors
- combination therapy
- pain management
- coronary artery bypass
- neuropathic pain
- binding protein
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- surgical site infection
- visible light